Lorenzo Lotto
was an Italian portrait painter, born at Venice, 1480; died at Loreto,
1556. This eminent artist was one of the best portrait painters who
ever lived, and occupies an almost unique position, especially amongst
Italian artists, for his extraordinary skill in detecting the
peculiarities of personal character and his power of setting them
forth in full accord with the temperament and mood of his sitters.
He was a great colorist, and possessed of a passionate admiration
for the beautiful, with a somewhat definite tendency towards the
ecstatic and mystical, in religion. He appears to have been a man
of strong personal faith, and had a sincere devotion to Loreto and
its great relic, the Holy House, spending his final years in that
city, and devoting himself very largely to its interests. His early
works were painted at Treviso, and from that place he went to Recanati
in 1508 to paint an important altar-piece. We do not know who was his
master, but his work reveals affinity with that of Alvise Vivarini.
He is believed to have painted some frescoes in the upper floor of the
Vatican in 1509, but, whether or not these were executed, he evidently
studied the work of
Raphael
when in Rome, as in his own paintings from 1512 to 1525 there are
many Raphaelistic characteristics.
Lotto first reached
Bergamo, the place with which his name is so closely connected, in
1513, spent some five years there, and, after a visit to Venice in
1523, returned again to the same place. In 1512 and in 1526 he was
painting at Jesi, the two works executed in the latter year being
of high importance. A wonderful picture is the great
“Crucifixion,” painted at Monte San Giusto in 1531. In
the following year he was in Venice, and a couple of years
afterwards again in Bergamo. Many of his finest pictures were
painted for small rural towns, such as Cingoli, Mogliano,
Trescorre, and Jesi. Fortunately most of his works are dated, and
he left behind him an account book, which he commenced in 1539, and
in which he records the names of his later pictures. This book he
kept down to within a few months of his death. There are a few of
his drawings in existence, notably at Chatsworth, Wilton House, the
Uffizi, and Vienna. Almost all his latest productions are at
Loreto, but during the last three years of his life, he appears to
have laid aside his brush.